Celoron no longer has any election expense since moving its Election Day to November and Fredonia did not have any offices up for election in 2012. Cassadaga and Sinclairville continue to have the village clerk as their chief election officer.

"In the past, using the mechanical lever voting machine, the cost to run even the smallest of elections was about $1,000," said Norman P. Green, a 14-year election commissioner veteran. "Using in-house printing and economies of scale, we have been able to drive down the cost of elections to make it affordable for villages. We also ran the school budget elections for Ripley, Bemus Point and Cassadaga Valley at similar charge back costs."

"While other counties in New York state are not yet able to provide low-cost election service to schools and villages, or even high cost service for that matter," Election Commissioner Brian C. Abram added.

Chautauqua County is one five counties in the state printing ballots in-house at fifteen cents per ballot. Counties using outside commercial printers pay 57 cents per ballot.

The Election Moderniza-tion. Act of 2005 required all schools and villages to use optical scan ballot counters, but extensions have been provided twice to the schools and villages by the state legislature because most counties are unable or unwilling to offer county election services.